The building is located opposite Gråbrødrestræde, a short street linking Klosterstræde with Gråbrødretorv.
[1] Hans Friderich Fritz, chief bookkeeper of Finance Casse Directionen with title of kammerråd, resided in the building with his wife Sophie Magdalene and one maid.
[5] Christen Jensen, a workman, resided in the building with his wife Mette Olsdatter, their three children (aged for to nine) and five lodgers.
[6] Bernt Levig Blocj, a Jewish merchant, resided in the building with his wife Igade Nosboch, their four children (aged one to four) and wet nurse and a maid.
[7] Christian Colding, a courier and fireman at Tydske Cancellie, resided in the building with his wife Henriche Holm, their four children (aged two to 13), a lodger and a maid.
Gischer subsequently ran his glazier's business, which would later be continued by his son, Peter Didrik Weinreich Fischer (1813–1884), from No.
[11] The military officer Christian de Meza (1792–1865), then an artillery captain, was a resident in the building from 1722 to 1824.
[12] Klosterstræde 23 is a four-storey, four-winged complex built in red brick.
The main wing towards the street is 10 bays wide and is constructed with projecting layers of mortar between the bricks (Danish: Hamburgfuge).